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Poison Girls
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The Poison Girls were an English anarcho-punk band from Brighton. The singer/guitarist, Vi Subversa, was a middle-aged mother of two at the band's inception, and wrote songs that explored sexuality and gender roles, often from an anarchist perspective.[1][2] The original Poison Girls line-up also included: Lance D'Boyle (drums); Richard Famous (guitar/vocals); Nil (tapes/bass/electric violin); and Bernhardt Rebours (bass/synthesiser/piano).
Key Information
History
[edit]Poison Girls formed in Brighton in 1976, before moving to Burleigh House in Essex, near to Dial House, the home of fellow anarchist band Crass, with whom they worked closely for a number of years, playing over 100 gigs with the band. In 1979 they contributed to the revival of the peace movement by playing a number of benefit gigs with Crass and paying for the production of the first CND badges since CND's heyday. Again in 1979, and again with Crass, they proved influential to the establishment of the short lived Wapping Autonomy Centre by contributing the track "Persons Unknown" to a split single with Crass (who contributed "Bloody Revolutions") and raising over £10,000.[3] Their song "Bully Boys", an attack on violent machismo led to the band being attacked by members of the National Front.[4] The band also set up the label X-N-Trix alongside a publishing arm for the Impossible Dream[5] magazine and recording studios for other artists.
Though their last studio recording to date was in 1985, a number of Poison Girls compilations have since been released, and their songs frequently appear on punk anthologies.
Poison Girls were involved with the production of Aids — The Musical, through a company called The Lenya Hobnoobs Theatre Company. They did another show called Mother Russia was a Lesbian in 1992, and reunited for a show at the London Astoria II in 1995, celebrating the 60th birthday of Vi Subversa. Currently, Richard Famous works as a painter and decorator. The pair performed as That Famous Subversa, until Subversa's death in February 2016.[6]
Members
[edit]- Vi Subversa - vocals/guitar
- Richard Famous - guitar/vocals
- Lance d’Boyle (Gary Lance Robins) - drums/backing vocals (1976–84)
- Bella Donna - bass (1976–77)
- Pete Fender - bass (1978, 1984)
- Scott Barker - bass (1978)
- Bernhardt Rebours - bass/synth/piano/backing vocals (1979–81)
- Nil - tapes.(1979–1981), electric violin and Bass (1980–1995)
- Chris Grace - bass (1982–83)
- Mark Dunn - bass (1983–84)
- Cynth Ethics (Sian Daniels) - synth/vocals (1983–85)
- Martin Heath - bass (1984)
- Max Vol - bass (1984–87)
- Agent Orange - drums (1984–87)
- Andy Demetriou - bass (1989-89)
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]- (1979) Hex (EP - X-N-Trix Records, re-released in 1980 on Crass Records)
- (1980) Chappaquiddick Bridge (plus "A Statement" flexi disc - Crass Records)
- (1982) Where's the Pleasure? (X-N-Trix Records)
- (1985) Songs of Praise (features cover artwork by Clifford Harper - X-N-Trix Records)
Live
[edit]- (1981) Total Exposure (X-N-Trix Records)
Singles
[edit]- (1979) "Closed Shop" / "Piano Lessons" (split 12" single with Fatal Microbes - X-N-Trix Records / Small Wonder Records)
- (1980) "Persons Unknown" (joint single with Crass as a benefit to raise funds to start an Anarchist Centre - Crass Records)
- (1980) "Bully Boys" / "Pretty Polly" (flexi disc free with fanzine In The City #15)
- (1980) "All Systems Go!" (7" - Crass Records)
- (1983) "Are You Happy Now?" / "White Cream Dream" (12" - Illuminated Records)
- (1983) "One Good Reason" (7" - Illuminated Records)
- (1984) "I'm Not A Real Woman" (12" - X-N-Trix Records)
- (1985) "The Price of Grain and the Price of Blood" (12" - Upright Records)
Compilations
[edit]- (1984) 7 Year Scratch (double compilation from previous releases plus live material - X-N-Trix Records)
- (1984) Who? What? Why? When? Where? (song "The Offending Article" included on compilation by Conflict, Mortarhate Records). The album had little circulation on its initial release, but gained greater currency when re-released in 2003.
- (1995) Statement - The Complete Recordings (4 CD boxed set with accompanying lyric and history booklets - Cooking Vinyl)
- (1995) Real Woman (Cooking Vinyl Records)
- (1997) Their Finest Moments (Nectar Masters Records)
- (1998) Poisonous (Recall 2 cd Records)
References
[edit]- ^ "Julian Cope presents Head Heritage | Unsung | Album of the Month | Nathaniel Mayer - Why Don't You Give It To Me?". Headheritage.co.uk. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ^ Lauraine Leblanc (1999). Pretty in Punk: Girls' Gender Resistance in a Boys' Subculture. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813526515. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ^ Berger, George (2006). The Story of Crass. Omnibus Press.
- ^ Lux, Martin (2006). Anti-Fascist. Phoenix Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-948984-35-8.
- ^ "Official Poison Girls". Poisongirls.co.uk. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ^ Salewicz, Chris (23 February 2016). "Vi Subversa: Inspirational elder stateswoman of punk who co-founded Poison Girls, denizens of its anarchist fringe". The Independent. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
Further reading
[edit]- Evan, Smith; Matthew, Worley (2014). "The rise of anarcho-punk". Against the grain: The British far left from 1956. Manchester University Press. pp. 136–. ISBN 978-1-84779-923-4.
External links
[edit]Poison Girls
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-Punk Origins and Formation (Pre-1976–1978)
The Poison Girls originated in 1975 as the musical component of The Body Show, an experimental theatre production performed by Vi Subversa (born Frances Sokolov in 1935), guitarist Richard Famous, drummer Lance d'Boyle, and keyboardist Bella Donna.[1] This marked Subversa's first public singing performance at age 40, drawing from influences like Berlin cabaret and her longstanding commitments to feminism, pacifism, anti-fascism, and anti-capitalism.[2] The group debuted the show at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival that year, receiving a review in The Scotsman.[1] Prior to this, Subversa, a mother of two, had no documented professional music career but embodied punk's ethos through personal activism rather than conventional youth rebellion.[6] In 1976, the ensemble relocated to Brighton and began performing under shifting names amid the emerging punk scene, inspired by acts such as the Buzzcocks, Sex Pistols, and the Clash after a pivotal screening of The Punk Rock Movie.[1] The lineup stabilized early in 1977 with Subversa on vocals and rhythm guitar, Famous on lead guitar, d'Boyle on drums, and Donna on keyboards, coinciding with the opening of The Vault—a former public toilet converted into Brighton's primary punk venue and rehearsal space, operational seven nights a week.[1] Their debut as Poison Girls occurred on March 17, 1977, at The Vault, establishing a raw, politically charged sound distinct from mainstream punk's nihilism.[1] By August 1977, the band had moved to Burleigh House in Epping, Essex, near the anarcho-punk hub of Dial House; Donna departed shortly after, replaced by bassist Scotty Boy Barker.[1] This period solidified their formation, with May 1978 seeing initial four-track studio recordings and the establishment of their independent label, Xntrix Records.[1] On October 11, 1978, they recorded their debut single "Piano Lessons/Closed Shop" at Spaceward Studios in Cambridge, featuring guest bassist Bernhardt Rebours, marking a transition toward recorded output while retaining core members Subversa, Famous, d'Boyle, and Barker.[1]Integration into Anarcho-Punk Movement (1979–1981)
In January 1979, Poison Girls initiated a close partnership with Crass, the seminal anarcho-punk band based at Dial House in Essex, leading to extensive joint touring that encompassed 97 shared performances over the subsequent two years.[7][8] This collaboration positioned Poison Girls within the burgeoning anarcho-punk network, emphasizing DIY ethics, anti-authoritarian politics, and communal living near Crass's communal setup at Burleigh House.[9] Their proximity to Dial House facilitated shared resources and ideological alignment, though Poison Girls maintained independent gigs beyond these tours.[7] The band's 1979 release of the Hex EP on Small Wonder Records marked an early punk-affiliated output, but their deeper immersion into anarcho-punk crystallized through Crass Records affiliations.[10] In February 1980, they recorded "Persons Unknown," released as a split 7-inch single with Crass's "Bloody Revolutions" on May 1980 via Crass Records, serving as a benefit for the Wapping Autonomy Centre in London.[7][11] This recording, produced in a raw punk style, critiqued state control and personal alienation, resonating with anarcho-punk's focus on direct action and anti-militarism.[12] By late 1980, Poison Girls issued their second album, Chappaquiddick Bridge, on November 23 via Crass Records, featuring eight tracks that blended feminist critiques with broader anarchist themes, further embedding them in the movement's cassette-trading and squat-venue circuits.[13][14] These efforts, alongside Vi Subversa's mature perspective as a 44-year-old mother challenging punk's youth-centric norms, helped expand anarcho-punk's appeal to diverse activists, though tensions arose over Crass's growing prominence potentially overshadowing Poison Girls.[15] Through 1981, continued touring with Crass reinforced their role, yet the band began asserting autonomy to avoid subsumption within the collective's orbit.[16]Peak Activity and Internal Changes (1982–1983)
In 1982, the Poison Girls ushered in a new era with bassist Chris Grace joining the core lineup of Vi Subversa, Richard Famous, and Lance d'Boyle, enabling three months of intensive songwriting for their album Where's the Pleasure?.[17] The record was tracked at Forest Studios on 12 April, Southern Studios on 23 April, and finalized on 16 August, receiving positive reception upon its September release via Xntrix Records.[17][18] This period represented peak output, highlighted by a short Dutch tour, extensive UK gigs—including performances alongside Crass, Zounds, and Flux of Pink Indians—and a year-end show at London's squatted Zig Zag Club on 18 December.[17] Activity continued robustly into 1983, with the band forging ties to alternative cabaret figures like Benjamin Zephaniah and Ben Elton for collaborative tours titled Cabaret of Fools and Big Brother Cabaret.[17] In April, they inked a deal with Illuminated Records and cut the single "One Good Reason/Cinnamon Garden" at Workhouse Studio.[17] Internal restructuring intensified in May, as Synth Ethics joined on keyboards and vocals, Tom Barwood assumed live sound duties, and Martin Goldschmidt took over business management.[17] By August, Mark Dunn succeeded Grace on bass, coinciding with sessions for the single "Happy Now/Cream Dream" at ICC Studios in Eastbourne; a year-long tour ensued, sustaining their anarcho-punk presence amid these lineup and operational shifts.[17]Disbandment, Reunions, and Vi Subversa's Post-Band Career (1984–2016)
The Poison Girls ceased regular activities following the release of their final studio album, Songs of Praise, in 1985, marking the end of their primary phase amid the declining anarcho-punk scene and internal shifts.[2][19] This disbandment aligned with broader movement fatigue, including ostracism from some punk circles after their critical stance on events like Live Aid in 1985, though no single dramatic split was reported.[2] The band reunited briefly in June 1995 for Vi Subversa's 60th birthday, performing at London's LA2 (part of the Astoria complex) on June 3 alongside acts such as Zounds and Omega Tribe; this one-off event was facilitated by Cooking Vinyl Records as a promotional tie-in.[5][20] No further full-band reunions occurred, with subsequent activity limited to compilations and archival releases rather than live performances.[21] Post-disbandment, Vi Subversa (born Frances Sokolov) maintained involvement in music sporadically, continuing to write songs and perform into her later years, including associations with projects like the band The Rooms.[5][19] Her activities emphasized personal anarcho-feminist politics over commercial pursuits, with no major solo albums or new bands emerging as primary endeavors. She delivered her final performance weeks before her death on February 19, 2016, at age 80, following a short illness; a private funeral followed, with public memorials planned.[6][19][6]Musical Style and Themes
Sonic Evolution and Influences
The Poison Girls' early sound in 1979, as heard on their debut album Hex, emphasized minimalist guitar-based punk with subtle arrangements and raw energy, reflecting the band's transition from experimental theatre roots to structured songwriting. This phase captured a direct, confrontational style aligned with emerging anarcho-punk, featuring Vi Subversa's distinctive gravelly and emotive vocals that ranged from aggressive assaults to more introspective tones.[22][15] By 1980's Chappaquiddick Bridge, the band's sonic palette grew more raucous and bilious, incorporating broader political urgency while maintaining punk's ferocity, yet hinting at diversification beyond strict genre confines. This evolution continued into live recordings like Total Exposure (1981), which showcased a high-energy, audience-challenging intensity with mighty riffs and dramatic silences for emphasis. Influences from pre-punk cabaret and countercultural performance art informed their rejection of punk's "Year Zero" reset, blending raw rebellion with theatrical wit and emotional depth.[22][15][23] The mid-1980s marked a shift toward experimentation and refinement, evident in Where’s the Pleasure? (1982), where the group abandoned conventional punk aggression for varied styles including rock-cabaret, Celtic folk elements, and poetic recitations, supported by crystal-clear production and explorations of synths, electric violin, and acoustic piano. Later works like Songs of Praise further diversified into suave funk and accessible rock, drawing parallels to artists such as Marianne Faithfull, John Cale, and Ian Dury through sophisticated arrangements and Noel Coward-esque vocal delivery. This progression underscored influences from punk's unbridled creativity but prioritized heartfelt ingenuity over dogma, evolving into a mature, eclectic sound that challenged listener expectations while retaining core anarchist ethos.[22][6][23]Lyrical Content and Political Ideology
The lyrics of Poison Girls, primarily penned by Vi Subversa, emphasized anarcha-feminist critiques of patriarchy, state authority, and social passivity, often integrating personal introspection with calls for direct action against oppression. Subversa's writing drew from her experiences as a middle-aged mother entering punk, addressing themes of gender roles, emotional vulnerability, and resistance to conformity in songs such as "Where's the Pleasure?" and "Chappaquiddick Bridge," which blended wit and raw confrontation to challenge societal expectations of women.[24][25] This approach distinguished their work from broader punk aggression, incorporating tenderness and self-awareness to underscore the contradictions of daily life under hierarchical systems.[24] Specific tracks exemplified their ideological focus, such as "Persons Unknown" (1980), a split single with Crass that critiqued silent survival and fear-based loyalty in activist circles, urging "persons in hiding" to reject head-in-the-sand inaction amid police repression and squatter evictions; the release raised over £10,000 for housing campaigns.[26][27] Similarly, "The Offending Article" voiced frustration with misogyny within anarcho-punk scenes, implying readiness for forceful pushback against male entitlement, while "Real Woman" (1984) probed sexuality and gender expectations through an anarchist lens, rejecting prescribed femininity.[28][29] Politically, the band adhered to anarchism refracted through radical feminism, prioritizing dismantling patriarchal structures alongside anti-capitalist and anti-statist principles, as seen in their emphasis on self-reliance over dogmatic leadership.[28][30] This anarcha-feminist stance confronted not only external authoritarianism but also internal biases like ageism and sexism in countercultural movements, positioning Poison Girls as outliers in male-dominated anarcho-punk by foregrounding generational and gender-specific intents.[28][31] Their ideology, informed by Subversa's pre-punk anarchist ties, favored personal politics—encompassing happiness, awareness, and relational dynamics—over rigid ideology, though sources documenting this, often from sympathetic punk historians, align with the band's self-described output.[32][25]Band Members
Core Lineup
The core lineup of Poison Girls formed in 1975 and featured Vi Subversa (born Frances Sokolov, 1935–2016) as lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist, Richard Famous on lead guitar and backing vocals, Lance D'Boyle on drums, and Bella Donna on bass.[1][19] This configuration marked the band's foundational period, with Subversa—then in her early 40s and a mother of two—providing the primary lyrical and vocal drive rooted in feminist and anarchist themes, while the instrumental trio delivered a raw punk sound.[6][1] Subversa's role extended beyond performance to songwriting and ideological direction, making her the band's enduring figurehead throughout its active years.[33] Richard Famous contributed guitar riffs and shared vocal duties, often co-shaping the band's aggressive yet melodic style, while D'Boyle's drumming provided the propulsive rhythm essential to their live energy.[9] Bella Donna's bass work anchored the early recordings, though lineup fluidity emerged later with replacements like Bernhardt Rebours.[34] This quartet debuted material in 1975, performing initial gigs that established their presence in the UK punk scene before broader anarcho-punk associations.[1]Changes and Contributions
The Poison Girls underwent lineup changes mainly in the bass position during their early development from 1977 to 1978, while maintaining a stable core of Vi Subversa on vocals and guitar, Richard Famous on guitar and vocals, and Lance d'Boyle on drums throughout their primary active period from 1979 to 1985.[1][2] Bella Donna, the band's initial bassist who had performed with the group since its 1975 formation for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival production The Body Show, left in late 1977 to travel to India, prompting a shift to full-time commitment on the band's activities.[1] Scotty Boy Barker briefly replaced her, but by 1978, Bernhardt Rebours took over on bass, also incorporating synthesizer and piano elements that expanded the band's instrumental palette during recordings like the October 11 session at Spaceward Studios.[1][35] Further changes were minimal, with occasional additions such as Nil on tapes, bass, and electric violin in early configurations, though the core trio anchored the band's sound and ideological consistency through disbandment in 1984.[9] Vi Subversa's contributions centered on songwriting and lyrics, drawing from her perspective as a mother in her 40s to explore personal-political intersections, including female aging, feminism, and anti-authoritarian themes that defined the band's anarcho-punk ethos.[2] Richard Famous shaped the sonic identity through his guitar work, infusing Berlin cabaret influences that differentiated Poison Girls from raw punk peers and supported a 12-year musical partnership with Subversa.[2] Lance d'Boyle provided rhythmic foundation on drums, enabling the band's high-energy live performances and recordings, while embodying a persistent creative drive described as that of "the impossible dreamer."[2] Bernhardt Rebours enhanced production depth post-1978 by integrating bass with keyboards, contributing to the evolution toward more textured anarcho-punk arrangements on releases via their Xntrix Records label.[35] These shifts and inputs collectively sustained the band's output of six studio albums and numerous singles, emphasizing collaborative DIY principles over rigid stability.[1]Discography
Studio Albums
The Poison Girls released three primary studio albums between 1980 and 1985, following their initial EP Hex in 1979, which some discographies classify as a full-length debut due to its 12-inch format and 18 tracks in expanded editions, though it was originally issued as an EP. These albums were produced on independent labels aligned with the anarcho-punk scene, emphasizing DIY ethics and limited pressings.[36]| Title | Release Date | Label | Format and Key Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chappaquiddick Bridge | April 1980 | Crass Records | Vinyl LP; 10 tracks, recorded at Southern Studios, focusing on raw punk energy with political lyrics; peaked at No. 1 on UK Indie Chart. |
| Where's the Pleasure? | 1982 | Water Wing Records | Vinyl LP; 9 tracks, self-produced with a shift toward more experimental post-punk elements; included contributions from new members post-lineup changes. |
| Songs of Praise | 1985 | Poison Girls Records | Vinyl LP; final studio effort before disbandment, 8 tracks blending punk with introspective themes; released amid internal shifts and Vi Subversa's solo pivot. |
Live Albums and Recordings
The Poison Girls released one dedicated live album, Total Exposure, in 1981 on XNTrix Records.[38] Recorded on July 5, 1981, at the Lasswade Centre in Edinburgh, the album captures the band's performance with tracks such as "Persons Unknown," "State Control," and "Old Tart's Song."[39] Engineered live by Cargo Studios and mixed at Southern Studios, it exemplifies the raw energy of their anarcho-punk shows during the early 1980s.[39] Additional live material appears in compilations, notably the 1984 double LP 7 Year Scratch on XNTrix, which combines prior releases with live recordings.[38] This release reflects the band's effort to archive their evolving sound amid frequent lineup changes and touring intensity.[38] In 2025, PM Press issued Persons Unknown: The Complete Recorded History, a seven-CD box set encompassing all studio and live albums, including Total Exposure on disc three alongside related singles and demos.[40] This compilation provides comprehensive access to the band's live output, highlighting unreleased tracks and affirming Total Exposure as their sole full-length live document.[40] No further dedicated live albums were produced post-1981, consistent with the band's shift toward disbandment by 1984.[40]Singles and EPs
The Poison Girls issued a series of singles and EPs between 1979 and 1984, primarily on small independent labels aligned with the UK's anarcho-punk network, including XNTrix, Small Wonder, Crass, and Illuminated Records. These releases often featured raw, politically charged tracks reflecting the band's feminist and anti-authoritarian themes, with limited pressings typical of DIY punk output.[38] Their earliest EP, Piano Lessons / Closed Shop, was a split 12-inch with Fatal Microbes released in 1979 by XNTrix Records and Small Wonder, containing Poison Girls' tracks "Piano Lessons" and "Closed Shop."[38] Later that year, they debuted their own Hex 12-inch EP on the same labels, reissued in 1981 by Crass Records; it included "Old Tart's Song," "Crisis," "Mao Tse Tung," and "Persons Unknown (original version)."[41][42] In 1980, Persons Unknown appeared as a 7-inch single on Crass Records, serving as a benefit for the Anarchist Centre in London and paired on a split release with Crass's "Bloody Revolutions"; the track became a staple in anarcho-punk repertoires for its call to collective resistance.[38][11] The following year, the 7-inch All Systems Go! (subtitled Promenade Immortelle / Dirty Work) was released on Crass, highlighting Vi Subversa's vocal interplay with the band's instrumentation.[38] By 1983, after shifting to Illuminated Records, the band released One Good Reason / Cinnamon Garden as a 7-inch single, followed by Are You Happy Now?, available in both 7-inch (with "Cream Dream" B-side) and 12-inch formats (adding "Menage Abattoir" and "Whiskey Voice").[38] Their final pre-disbandment release, the 1984 Real Woman EP, came out on XNTrix in both 7-inch and 12-inch versions, featuring "Real Woman," "Perfect Crime," "Tension," and "Take the Toys," encapsulating their evolving post-punk edge.[38]| Title | Year | Label | Format | Key Tracks/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Piano Lessons / Closed Shop | 1979 | XNTrix / Small Wonder | 12" split EP | Split with Fatal Microbes; "Piano Lessons," "Closed Shop"[38] |
| Hex | 1979 (reissue 1981) | XNTrix / Small Wonder (Crass reissue) | 12" EP | "Old Tart's Song," "Crisis," "Mao Tse Tung"; debut standalone EP[41] |
| Persons Unknown | 1980 | Crass | 7" single | Benefit single; split with Crass[11] |
| All Systems Go! | 1981 | Crass | 7" single | "Promenade Immortelle," "Dirty Work"[38] |
| One Good Reason | 1983 | Illuminated | 7" single | "One Good Reason," "Cinnamon Garden"[38] |
| Are You Happy Now? | 1983 | Illuminated | 7"/12" single | 7": + "Cream Dream"; 12": + "Menage Abattoir," "Whiskey Voice"[38] |
| Real Woman | 1984 | XNTrix | 7"/12" EP | "Real Woman," "Perfect Crime," "Tension," "Take the Toys"[38] |
Compilations and Recent Releases
In 1998, Snapper Music released Poisonous, a two-CD compilation spanning the band's career highlights, including tracks from their studio albums, singles, and previously unreleased material recorded between 1977 and 1985.[43] This retrospective drew from sessions produced by figures like Penny Rimbaud and John Loder, emphasizing the band's raw punk energy and political lyrics, though it has been critiqued for uneven sound quality in some archival transfers.[43] Reissues in the 2010s revitalized interest in Poison Girls' catalog. In July 2014, vinyl editions of Hex (originally a 1979 EP) and Chappaquiddick Bridge (1980) were re-pressed for the first time in over 30 years, restoring original artwork and mastering from master tapes held by surviving members.[44] A deluxe 12-inch vinyl reissue of the 1980 single Persons Unknown followed in November 2015 to mark its 35th anniversary, limited to a small run via All the Madmen Records, featuring remastered audio and updated sleeve notes on the band's anti-militarism themes.[44] The most comprehensive recent release is Persons Unknown: The Complete Recorded History, a seven-CD box set co-published by PM Press, Cooking Vinyl, Free Dirt, and Active Distribution in December 2025 (with pre-orders shipping January 2026).[40] Limited to 1,000 numbered copies, it compiles all studio and live albums, singles from labels like XNTrix and Crass Records, demo tapes, unreleased tracks, Vi Subversa's solo material under "That Famous Subversa," and additional live/home recordings, sequenced chronologically by band associate Rich Cross and Richard Famous.[40] Accompanied by a 96-page booklet with lyrics, photos, and a historical essay by Cross, the set addresses archival gaps from the band's DIY ethos, which previously limited official documentation.[40] This edition prioritizes fidelity to original sources, avoiding over-polished remixing to preserve the anarcho-punk authenticity.[40]Reception
Contemporary Reviews and Achievements
The Poison Girls achieved prominence in the anarcho-punk scene through key releases and collaborations during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Their debut EP Hex, issued in 1979 on Small Wonder/Xntrix Records and produced by Crass member Penny Rimbaud, focused on sex roles and personal politics with solid guitar-driven arrangements.[22] The band's subsequent album Chappaquiddick Bridge (1980), also on Crass Records and produced by Rimbaud, intensified its lyrical anger and Vi Subversa's theatrical vocal style, exemplified in tracks like "Statement."[22] They contributed to the scene's infrastructure by providing initial funding for Crass Records' launch, enabling further DIY punk output.[45] Extensive touring marked their activities from 1979 to 1985, with frequent performances alongside Crass and at squats or targeted venues, such as Conway Hall in Holborn and the Theatre Royal in London's East End, where gigs often faced police interference.[7] The 1982 live album Total Exposure, recorded in Edinburgh, captured their evolving set with new material, though noted for less variety than studio work.[22] Contemporary reviews in UK music press and punk outlets praised their evolution and impact. Sounds critic Johnny Waller acclaimed the 1982 LP Where's the Pleasure? as "the last great punk record," highlighting its refined sexual politics themes amid lineup changes and musical maturation.[46] Maximum Rocknroll lauded their live intensity as among Britain's finest post-punk acts, emphasizing raw energy in recordings like Persons Unknown.[47] Trouser Press commended Subversa's witty, subtle protest lyrics across releases, blending rock with cabaret and folk elements in EPs like I'm Not a Real Woman (1983).[22]Criticisms and Shortcomings
Some reviewers criticized Poison Girls' music for its perceived lack of evolution beyond basic punk structures, describing it as grinding or charging forward with an "oppressive grimness" that failed to innovate or provide enjoyment, even as a vehicle for their political messages.[48] In a 1982 Sounds review of the live album Total Exposure, Phil Sutcliffe noted that the band's sound offered nothing novel and did not stimulate engagement with its content, rating it three-and-a-half stars out of five despite acknowledging the conviction behind Vi Subversa's delivery.[48] Critics also pointed to inconsistencies in lyrical focus and musical variety. The Trouser Press entry highlighted that tracks on Hex (1979), such as "Bremen Song," lacked cogent meaning despite frantic energy, while Chappaquiddick Bridge (1980) featured substantial but often unfocused lyrics that theatrical presentation could not fully redeem.[22] The live Total Exposure was deemed less varied than studio efforts, suggesting it as a suboptimal introduction to the band's work.[22] Later attempts to broaden appeal through more accessible production drew complaints of dilution. Mid-1980s singles like "One Good Reason" and "Are You Happy Now?" adopted smoother, radio-friendly sounds that stripped away the "tougher, spikier edges" of earlier releases, resulting in work that lacked the "archness, acidity, and biting edge" characteristic of Poison Girls' initial output and failed to highlight Subversa's vocal strengths effectively.[15] These efforts did not achieve commercial breakthrough, underscoring a shortcoming in transitioning from anarcho-punk's underground intensity to wider listenership without compromising core attributes.[15]Controversies and Debates
Internal Band Dynamics
The Poison Girls' core lineup remained stable for much of the band's primary active period from 1979 to 1985, consisting of Vi Subversa on vocals and rhythm guitar, Richard Famous on lead guitar and vocals, and Lance d'Boyle on drums.[2] This trio provided continuity amid the anarcho-punk scene's volatility, with Subversa—already in her 40s at formation—serving as the creative and ideological driving force, drawing on her experiences as a mother and feminist to shape the band's lyrical focus on personal politics and gender dynamics.[15] Subversa formed a 12-year personal and musical partnership with Famous and d'Boyle starting around 1977, which underpinned the band's cohesion and enabled collaborative songwriting that blended punk aggression with cabaret influences.[5] Early members included Bernhardt Rebours on bass and Nil on tapes, bass, and electric violin, but the bass position experienced the most turnover, with a succession of players joining and departing over the years, reflecting adaptations to touring demands and creative shifts rather than documented acrimony.[9] Band members often lived communally, sharing housing with Subversa's teenage children—who were involved in related punk projects such as Fatal Microbes and Rubella Ballet—which intensified interpersonal bonds but coincided with lineup flux at bass.[49] Periods of transition, such as relocations to squats like Burleigh House in Epping around 1980 and introductions of new bassists, aligned with setlist overhauls and a determination to evolve beyond initial punk constraints, signaling internal adaptability without evidence of major fractures.[34] The band's wind-down by 1989 and brief 1995 reprise stemmed more from external factors, including post-Live Aid ostracism for rejecting consensus political platforms, than from interpersonal breakdowns.[2]Ideological Positions and Critiques
The Poison Girls articulated anarcha-feminist positions that integrated anti-capitalist critiques with challenges to patriarchal structures, advocating for the dismantling of gender hierarchies through direct action and personal autonomy rather than state intervention.[28] Frontwoman Vi Subversa, performing under that pseudonym from the band's formation in 1977, emphasized self-reliance against authoritarianism, misogyny, and ageism in countercultural spaces, as evident in lyrics like those in "Persons Unknown" (1981), which rejected systemic violence and promoted collective feminist resistance.[26] Their ideology extended to pacifism and anti-militarism, influencing participation in movements like the Greenham Common women's peace camps in the early 1980s, where they framed opposition to nuclear armament as intertwined with gendered oppression.[50] Critiques of these positions often centered on perceived divergences from orthodox anarchist priorities, with some contemporaries arguing that the band's focus on personal and feminist issues overshadowed broader anti-statist strategies.[51] Relations with Crass soured by 1982 over ideological assertions, as Poison Girls resisted subsumption into Crass's more socially oriented pacifist framework, leading to public disputes that highlighted tensions between personalist anarcha-feminism and collective class-based analysis.[15] Within the evolving anarcho-punk milieu of the mid-1980s, detractors noted that the band's emphasis on introspective gender politics clashed with increasingly confrontational, male-dominated expressions, rendering their approach less adaptable to scene dynamics.[52] These views, primarily documented in retrospective punk histories rather than contemporaneous mainstream analyses, reflect intra-movement debates but lack extensive external scrutiny, potentially due to the niche, ideologically aligned sources covering the band.[22]Legacy and Impact
Influence on Punk Subgenres
The Poison Girls played a pivotal role in shaping anarcho-punk during its formative years from 1979 to 1985, aligning closely with Crass Records and emphasizing direct-action politics, anti-militarism, and collective DIY production that distinguished the subgenre from earlier punk's nihilism or commercialism.[2][53] Their releases, such as the 1980 album Persons Unknown, integrated raw punk energy with agitprop lyrics critiquing state control and capitalism, contributing to the subgenre's hallmark of squat gigs, tape trading, and independent distribution networks that bypassed major labels.[25] This approach helped solidify anarcho-punk's ethic of accessibility and subversion, influencing bands like Conflict and Flux of Pink Indians in prioritizing ideological consistency over musical polish.[54] Through an anarcha-feminist lens, the band advanced punk's gender dynamics, with Vi Subversa's lyrics on tracks like "Persons Unknown" interrogating patriarchy, generational divides, and women's autonomy in ways that prefigured feminist-inflected variants of anarcho-punk and broader post-punk experimentation.[28] As a middle-aged mother fronting the group from its 1976 inception, Subversa modeled defiance of punk's youth-centric and male-dominated norms, fostering a space for female-led agitation that echoed in later UK scenes like the Peace Girls collective and informed DIY feminist zines.[6][15] Their refusal of hierarchical band structures—evident in shared songwriting and communal living—reinforced punk's libertarian undercurrents, impacting subgenres by embedding anti-authoritarian feminism as a counter to both state power and internal scene machismo.[55] While direct lineages to 1990s riot grrrl are anecdotal rather than documented, Poison Girls' emphasis on reclaiming punk for women through confrontational performance and anti-sexist rhetoric provided a proto-template for that subgenre's DIY empowerment ethos, as noted in retrospective analyses of punk's feminist evolution.[56] Their archival reissues, such as the 2015 Small Wonder compilation, have sustained this influence by highlighting punk's potential for intersectional critique beyond class alone.Long-Term Cultural and Archival Recognition
The Poison Girls' contributions to anarcho-punk have been preserved through institutional archives, with Yale University's British Punk Archive holding materials from the band's activities, including design ephemera, printed matter, photocopied clippings, and a photograph dating to 1980-1981.[58] This collection situates the band within the broader evolution of politically radical punk groups emerging in England during the late 1970s and early 1980s.[58] Similarly, the Museum of Youth Culture references Poison Girls alongside Crass in documenting anarcho-punk's shift toward anti-war protest and deeper political engagement, highlighting their role in subcultural tribes that extended punk's proletarian claims.[59] Scholarly and historical accounts have increasingly recognized the band's foundational influence, as evidenced by their mention in Ian Glasper's Day the Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980-1984, which credits Poison Girls and Crass with opening floodgates for subsequent acts like Amebix, Chumbawamba, and Flux of Pink Indians.[60] In 2025, PM Press published This Is a Message to Persons Unknown: The Story of Poison Girls, the first comprehensive band history, compiled from exclusive interviews, zines, contemporary accounts, and members' personal archives; it challenges punk's "Year Zero" narrative by tracing the group's pre-punk origins and their blend of ferocity, wit, and inventive sound.[24][61] This volume, accompanied by a Kickstarter-funded box set Persons Unknown: The Complete Recorded History released on September 22, 2025, underscores renewed archival efforts to document their full discography and ideological impact.[23][62] Ongoing cultural acknowledgment appears in niche publications and reflections, such as Richard Famous's 2025 discussions on podcasts and print, which emphasize the band's pre-punk roots and enduring personal influence on fans through interviews and zines rather than mainstream media.[52] While no feature-length documentaries exist—due in part to limited surviving materials—their legacy persists in anarcho-punk retrospectives, informing analyses of punk's confrontation with misogyny, ageism, and state capitalism.[63] These efforts reflect a specialized rather than widespread recognition, centered on punk historiography and subcultural preservation rather than broader popular revival.References
- https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/593-down-is-up-25-reissues-from-slant-6-lizzy-mercier-descloux-poison-girls-rita-abatzi-sin-34/
